International Intervention in Civil Conflict - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 31
About This Presentation
Title:

International Intervention in Civil Conflict

Description:

The University of California Institute on Global Conflict and Cooperation (IGCC) ... Planned elections leave too much uncertainty. Contact: Prof. Barbara Walter ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:76
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 32
Provided by: igcc4
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: International Intervention in Civil Conflict


1
International Intervention in Civil Conflict The
University of California Institute on Global
Conflict and Cooperation (IGCC) and Stanford
University March 18, 2002 Sponsored by the
Carnegie Corporation of New York
2
Introduction
  • The tragedy of September 11 has already led the
    United States into Afghanistan.
  • We may see further interventions in unstable
    countries, which are hospitable to terrorist
    bases.
  • As part of building the foundations for the
    control of terrorism, the United States seems
    likely to face questions about how best to
    re-establish political order.

3
How Past Experience Might Inform Policy on
Afghanistan
  • Three teams of scholars presented their
    assessments of third-party interventions in civil
    conflicts, including
  • peacemaking
  • peacekeeping
  • transitional governments
  • creating political order
  • Their findings are presented here.

4
State-Building in the Aftermath of
War Barbara Walter UC San Diego
Contact Prof. Barbara Walter Graduate School of
International Relations and Pacific
Studies University of California, San Diego 9500
Gilman Drive La Jolla, CA 92093-0519
USA bfwalter_at_ucsd.edu
5
Main Points
  • Successful rebuilding requires a third party.
  • Deployment, size, and timing are critical.
  • The type of political system established
    duringthe transition has an enormous impact on
    success.

Contact Prof. Barbara Walter Graduate School of
International Relations and Pacific
Studies University of California, San Diego 9500
Gilman Drive La Jolla, CA 92093-0519
USA bfwalter_at_ucsd.edu
6
First Pattern
  • What we know about civil war transitions
  • Combatants almost always failed to implement a
    treaty unless a third party enforced or verified
    demobilization.

Contact Prof. Barbara Walter Graduate School of
International Relations and Pacific
Studies University of California, San Diego 9500
Gilman Drive La Jolla, CA 92093-0519
USA bfwalter_at_ucsd.edu
7
Signed Settlements and Their Method of
Resolution, 19401992
Contact Prof. Barbara Walter Graduate School of
International Relations and Pacific
Studies University of California, San Diego 9500
Gilman Drive La Jolla, CA 92093-0519
USA bfwalter_at_ucsd.edu
8
Second Pattern
  • Power-sharing pacts are also important.
  • 55 percent of peace treaties that included
    guaranteed positions or a specific quota of power
    were successfully implemented.
  • Treaties that didnt include such power-sharing
    were significantly less successful.

Contact Prof. Barbara Walter Graduate School of
International Relations and Pacific
Studies University of California, San Diego 9500
Gilman Drive La Jolla, CA 92093-0519
USA bfwalter_at_ucsd.edu
9
Third Pattern
  • The less inclusive a government, the more
    peacekeepers will be required for a successful
    transition to take place.

Contact Prof. Barbara Walter Graduate School of
International Relations and Pacific
Studies University of California, San Diego 9500
Gilman Drive La Jolla, CA 92093-0519
USA bfwalter_at_ucsd.edu
10
Requirements for Re-building a State
  • Fighting factions must demobilize, disengage, and
    dismantle separate militaries.
  • Factions must also hand over occupied territory
    to a new central government that they wont
    necessarily control.

Contact Prof. Barbara Walter Graduate School of
International Relations and Pacific
Studies University of California, San Diego 9500
Gilman Drive La Jolla, CA 92093-0519
USA bfwalter_at_ucsd.edu
11
Two Opportunities for Exploitation
  • Demobilization makes groups vulnerable to
    surprise attack.
  • It also makes it easy for rivals to seize control
    of the state and permanently exclude others from
    power.

Contact Prof. Barbara Walter Graduate School of
International Relations and Pacific
Studies University of California, San Diego 9500
Gilman Drive La Jolla, CA 92093-0519
USA bfwalter_at_ucsd.edu
12
What This Means for Cooperation
  • Combatants will anticipate problems of
    enforcement and shy away from cooperation unless
  • They obtain a third-party security guarantee.
  • They obtain a strict distribution of political
    power in the first post-war government.

Contact Prof. Barbara Walter Graduate School of
International Relations and Pacific
Studies University of California, San Diego 9500
Gilman Drive La Jolla, CA 92093-0519
USA bfwalter_at_ucsd.edu
13
Lessons for Afghanistan
  • Third-party enforcement or verification is
    necessary for success.
  • The timing of intervention is very important.
    The current force must stay past June 2002.
  • The current force is too small.
  • Planned elections leave too much uncertainty.

Contact Prof. Barbara Walter Graduate School of
International Relations and Pacific
Studies University of California, San Diego 9500
Gilman Drive La Jolla, CA 92093-0519
USA bfwalter_at_ucsd.edu
14
  • The Power-Dividing
  • Strategy
  • Phil Roeder
  • UC San Diego

Contact Prof. Phil Roeder Department of
Political Science University of California, San
Diego 9500 Gilman Drive La Jolla, CA 92093-0521
USA proeder_at_ucsd.edu
15
An Overview
  • The Dilemma of Powersharing
  • Long-term Dangers of Powersharing
  • Policy Implications
  • A Democratic Alternative Power-Dividing

Contact Prof. Phil Roeder Department of
Political Science University of California, San
Diego 9500 Gilman Drive La Jolla, CA 92093-0521
USA proeder_at_ucsd.edu
16
The Dilemma of Powersharing
  • Initiation of peace (Short-term)
    versus
  • Consolidation of peace (Long-term)

Contact Prof. Phil Roeder Department of
Political Science University of California, San
Diego 9500 Gilman Drive La Jolla, CA 92093-0521
USA proeder_at_ucsd.edu
17
Long-term Dangers of Powersharing
  • Incentives to Escalate Ethnic Claims
  • Incentives to Escalate Coercion
  • Inter-ethnic Contagion

Contact Prof. Phil Roeder Department of
Political Science University of California, San
Diego 9500 Gilman Drive La Jolla, CA 92093-0521
USA proeder_at_ucsd.edu
18
Policy Implications
  • Avoid premature intervention
  • In the face of deadlock, partition
  • Beware quick fixes to the dilemma
  • Expand participation in negotiations
  • Implement power-dividing

Contact Prof. Phil Roeder Department of
Political Science University of California, San
Diego 9500 Gilman Drive La Jolla, CA 92093-0521
USA proeder_at_ucsd.edu
19
A Democratic Alternative Power-Dividing
  • Selectively limit government
  • Leave divisive issues to society
  • Give priority to individual rights, not ethnic
    group rights
  • Institutionalize multiple majorities
  • Separation of powers at the national level
  • Multiple, overlapping subnational jurisdictions

Contact Prof. Phil Roeder Department of
Political Science University of California, San
Diego 9500 Gilman Drive La Jolla, CA 92093-0521
USA proeder_at_ucsd.edu
20
  • What to Do About
  • Collapsed States
  • Lessons from UN
  • Peacekeeping Operations in the 1990s
  • James Fearon and David Laitin
  • Stanford University

Contact Prof. James Fearon Department of
Political Science Stanford University Stanford,
California, 94305-2044 USA jfearon_at_stanford.edu
21
Introduction
  • September 11, 2001, and the ensuing war in
    Afghanistan have forced the Bush administration
    to consider nation building in a multilateral
    context
  • What can be learned from 1990s UN peacekeeping
    operations (UNPKOs) in countries torn by civil
    war?
  • Can these lessons be applied in Afghanistan?

Contact Prof. James Fearon Department of
Political Science Stanford University Stanford,
California, 94305-2044 USA jfearon_at_stanford.edu
22
Reforming UN Peacekeeping Operations
  • Many UN missions failed dramatically in 1990s
  • The Brahimi Report (August 2000) offers one set
    of solutions for reform
  • Proposed solutions may be ineffectual because of
    underlying political pathologies

Contact Prof. James Fearon Department of
Political Science Stanford University Stanford,
California, 94305-2044 USA jfearon_at_stanford.edu
23
The Brahimi Reports Diagnosis
  • Failure attributed to
  • Lack of political will on part of member states
    and Security Council
  • Commitment gap Security Council mandates
    exceeded resources
  • Operational inefficiencies and lack of
    coordination

Contact Prof. James Fearon Department of
Political Science Stanford University Stanford,
California, 94305-2044 USA jfearon_at_stanford.edu
24
Proposed Remedies
  • Security Council to write clear and achievable
    mandatesand back up with resources
  • Secretary General must make scope of mission,
    including difficulties, clear from outset
  • Robust rules of engagement for UN forces
    permission to fight back, stop violence against
    civilians, deter spoilers
  • Reform Department of PKO and related UN
    departments
  • Increase staff of DPKO and related departments

Contact Prof. James Fearon Department of
Political Science Stanford University Stanford,
California, 94305-2044 USA jfearon_at_stanford.edu
25
Causes of the Commitment Gap
  • The Brahimi Report fails to deal with the
    underlying causes
  • of the PKO commitment gap in the 1990s
  • Political pathologies within UN
  • SCSG Western nations pass buck to UN on
    humanitarian crises.Missions underfunded, UN
    blamed for failure
  • SGSC Secretary General wants to get foot in
    the door in a particular crisis by underselling
    mission requirements
  • Both pathologies led to mandates exceeding
    resources, especially in Rwanda, Somalia, and
    Bosnia

Contact Prof. James Fearon Department of
Political Science Stanford University Stanford,
California, 94305-2044 USA jfearon_at_stanford.edu
26
Mission Creep
  • A political/military pathology that may
    generalize beyond the 1990s failures
  • Expansion of a PKO beyond its initial mandate
  • Practically inevitable in collapsed states
  • Spoilers with guerilla warfare as option
    threaten unstable governments on paper
  • UN or other international interveners cant
    appear to run mission escalates
  • No clean exit long-term result an accumulation
    of protectorates, or neo-trusteeships, around
    the world

Contact Prof. James Fearon Department of
Political Science Stanford University Stanford,
California, 94305-2044 USA jfearon_at_stanford.edu
27
General Implications
  • Present UN monitoring subject to logic of mission
    creep
  • Cant fight spoilers without loss of mediating
    credibility
  • Robust engagement will rarely be feasible
  • Transitional administrations are a new form of
    trusteeship, without the safeguards of the old
    UN Trusteeship Council
  • These need a more developed legal basis

Contact Prof. James Fearon Department of
Political Science Stanford University Stanford,
California, 94305-2044 USA jfearon_at_stanford.edu
28
UN Monitoring
  • UN should subcontract security components to
    interested major powers in the troubled region
  • UN should monitor in both traditional (chapter 6)
    senseand in newer sense of reporting on
    third-party interveners
  • UN should specialize in institution-building
    assistance

Contact Prof. James Fearon Department of
Political Science Stanford University Stanford,
California, 94305-2044 USA jfearon_at_stanford.edu
29
Transitional Administrations
  • Western nations and UN must face up to
    neo-trusteeship in form of transitional
    administrations
  • Exit by slowly shifting financial burden to
    reconstructing state
  • This strategy addresses fundamental problems of
    who pays and how to exit
  • Provides strong incentive for new government to
    get up and running

Contact Prof. James Fearon Department of
Political Science Stanford University Stanford,
California, 94305-2044 USA jfearon_at_stanford.edu
30
Afghanistan
  • The Bush administration has not come to grips
  • with dynamics of mission creep in a collapsed
    state
  • Choices
  • Pull out, returning Afghanistan to pre-Taliban
    anarchy
  • Ensure security
  • This means substantial PK force commitment
  • European nations wont jump in unless U.S.
    signals willingness

Contact Prof. James Fearon Department of
Political Science Stanford University Stanford,
California, 94305-2044 USA jfearon_at_stanford.edu
31
A Commitment Gap on the Horizon?
  • Current leadership temporary, held together by
    prospect of reconstruction aid
  • Can a security welfare state, where major
    powers pay continually for war prevention, be
    avoided?
  • One solution
  • Afghani government pays for peacekeeping forces.
  • Main players have veto power. All sides must buy
    intonew political arrangements.
  • Strong have incentive to stabilize government,
    since not doing so pits them against
    international community.

Contact Prof. James Fearon Department of
Political Science Stanford University Stanford,
California, 94305-2044 USA jfearon_at_stanford.edu
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com